Ipray: Crugman has a fairly famous analysis of kanes resis ther theres chapters one through four, cansians, and chapter twelve, cansians. He thinks people in general have this sort of rational rationality about them, or they will come to see things that are true, as true. I think he's perplexed if the american's desire to carve up the british empire, he takes for granted that he obviously would want to keep all these different colonies and territories under british rule. And he can't even really come to see that roosevelt is going in that direction when it's quite obvious at least in what roosevelt is doing...
After reading Zach Carter’s intellectual biography of Keynes earlier this year, Tyler declared that the book would qualify “without reservation” as one of the best of the year. Tyler’s assessment proved common, as the book would soon become a New York Times bestseller and later be declared one of the ten best books of the year by Publishers Weekly. In the book, Carter not only traces Keynes’ intellectual achievements throughout his lifetime, but also shows how those ideas have lasted long after him, making him one of the most influential economists who’s ever lived.
Zach joined Tyler to discuss what Keynes got right – and wrong – about the Treaty of Versailles, how working in the India Office influenced his economic thinking, the seemingly strange paradox of his “liberal imperialism,” the elusive central message of The General Theory, the true extent of Keynes’ interest in eugenics, why he had a conservative streak, why Zach loves Samuel Delaney’s novel Nova, whether Bretton Woods was doomed to fail, the Enlightenment intuitions behind early defenses of the gold standard, what’s changed since Zach became a father, his next project, and more.
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Recorded October 29th, 2020 Other ways to connect